Sundance Channel moves forward with “Push Girls”
January 16, 2012 by Barry Walsh Email/Share
Sundance Channel has greenlit Push Girls, a 14-episode series from Gay Rosenthal Productions (Little People, Big World) following four dynamic women who, through accident or illness, have become paralyzed from the neck or waist down.
The series, announced during the winter TCA press tour, will follow the four women as they approach different stages of their lives, according to the AMC cable net. Angela is a model recently separated from her husband; multi-talented performer Auti is trying to have a baby with her husband at the age of 42; former competitive swimmer Mia is wanting to try swimming again for the first time since high school; and Tiphany is exploring ways to find her true calling in life.
Push Girls is currently in production and is slated to premiere in April of this year.
“The indomitable spirit of this series will give viewers permission to stare at a world that they may previously have been too polite – or too frightened – to explore,” said Sundance Channel general manager Sarah Barnett. “Sundance Channel allows the ‘Push Girls’ to convey the stark reality of their lives, something our broadminded audience will appreciate. We are remarkably fortunate to get to work with this exceptional group of women.”
“Watching the ‘Push Girls’ tackling life with spirit and confidence is not only inspiring but compelling,” added Rosenthal. “The show challenges perceptions about life in a wheelchair, giving the audience an honest, no-nonsense look into their world. It’s real, it’s outspoken and it’s from the heart.”
Marco Bresaz and Jonathan Grosskopf will serve as executive producers for Sundance Channel.
Tags: Gay Rosenthal Productions, Push Girls, Sarah Barnett, Sundance Channe
Sexy, spirited... and paralysed: Meet the wheelchair-bound stars of a groundbreaking new reality show
By HANNAH RAND
UPDATED: 17:34 EST, 18 January 2012
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As any aspiring actor will no doubt testify, carving a career in Hollywood is tough. So imagine the challenge if a hopeful were paralysed and confined to a wheelchair.
A new show based on just that scenario is set to be the next big thing in reality TV.
Push Girls, which will air on the Sundance Channel in April, follows the personal lives of four wheelchair-bound women as they negotiate familiar struggles from motherhood to relationship break-ups.
No limits: New reality series Push Girls stars, from left, Mia Schaikewitz, Auti Angel, Angela Rockwood and Tiphany Adams, who are all wheelchair-bound and paralysed from the neck or waist down
The women say it was the producers' honest, straight-talking approach that convinced them to take part in the 14-episode series.
Angela Rockwood, 36, was an actress who appeared in The Fast and the Furious before a 2001 car accident left her without the use of her torso, arms or legs.
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'I'm a quadriplegic, so I need more assistance than the other girls,' she told the New York Post.
'I need someone to come in and catheterize me. I need someone to bathe me. I need someone to lotion me up...This is my reality, and it was important that the show capture that.'
Always a dancer: Auti Angel, 42, worked with Milli Vanilli in the early Nineties, before a car smash in 1992
Ms Rockwood may not be able to wash or go to the toilet without help but the main issue consuming her life is more commonplace - a divorce.
'I think the common denominator with us is our wheelchairs,' she adds of her co-stars. 'But it's not about the wheelchair. It's about our spirit, and how we just live life to the fullest.'
Honest approach: Angela Rockwood, 36, appeared in The Fast and the Furious before a 2001 car accident left her without the use of her torso, arms or legs
Model Tiphany Adams, 28, survived a drunk-driving crash in her senior high school year that left three of her friends dead. She was given a five per cent chance of living by doctors.
She told the paper: 'Most people would want to give up. But all four of us girls chose to triumph over the tragedy.'
Indeed, Auti Angel, 42, was a successful hip-hop dancer who worked with Milli Vanilli in the early Nineties, before a car smash in 1992.
'I was J Lo before J Lo,' Ms Angel told website disaboom.com. 'I danced with LL Cool J. I went on tour with rap artists and I was about to sign a record deal as part of an all-Latin female Hip Hop group.
'Then, the tragic car accident happened, severing my spinal cord and leaving me wheelchair bound.'
But despite being dropped by the record company because they were not 'willing to wait [for her recovery]', Ms Angel's energy and dynamism has never dimmed.
'Once a dancer, always a dancer,' she said. 'The spirit of dance never dies, no matter what happens to your body.'
Like her castmates, Ms Angel's goal will be more familiar to the show's audience - one of trying to get pregnant and start a family.
The final member of the cast is Mia Schaikewitz, 32, a former competitive swimmer, who lost the use of her legs after a rare type of brain haemorrhage at the age of 15.
In the show, Miss Schaikewitz assesses the break-down of her relationship with her able-bodied boyfriend and faces swimming again for the first time since her accident.
Brave hearts: Model Tiphany Adams, 28, survived a drunk-driving crash in her senior high school year. Mia Schaikewitz, 32, a former swimmer, lost the use of her legs after a brain haemorrhage at the age of 15
Producer Gay Rosenthal, who was also behind hit series Little People, Big World, says Push Girls is a groundbreaking idea.
'I am always trying to forge new frontiers,' she told the New York Post. 'I started developing this show as soon as I met the girls.'
But she added that the concept of a reality television show about four wheelchair-bound women was a hard one to sell.
'There definitely were some [networks] who didn't know what to do with' the show, she admitted.
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Print articlehink it's about time women in wheelchairs get shown as something besides an invalid. speaking as a sexy woman in a wheelchair, if they do their jobs right, eventually you won't even see the wheelchair anymore. i'm looking forward to watching this show, to see just how in depth they get into wheelchair life.
- karen, north providence, RI, 18/1/2012 19:26
Click to rate Rating 39 Report abuse
Are they still claiming benefits whilst earning money in showbusiness ? - Brentmeister 28 and a half, Alone In my Bunker by the sea, 18/1/2012 9:06
Somehow it isn't surprising that you're alone. This is an outstandingly selfish and objectionable comment. And have you even noticed that this is a US show?
- John, UK, 18/1/2012 18:53
Click to rate Rating 139 Report abuseSome things in life do not need to be shoved down our throat. This is one of them.
- Moi, Canada, 18/1/2012 18:05
Click to rate Rating 293 Report abuse
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